- •Dan Brown Digital Fortress
- •Prologue
- •Chapter 1
- •Chapter 2
- •Chapter 3
- •National security agency (nsa) crypto facility authorized personnel only
- •Hl fkzc vd lds
- •Im glad we met
- •Chapter 4
- •Chapter 5
- •Employee carl austin terminated for inappropriate conduct.
- •Time elapsed: 15:09:33 awaiting key: ________
- •Chapter 6
- •Chapter 7
- •“Transltr?”
- •Chapter 8
- •Keep the change.
- •Chapter 9
- •Time elapsed: 15:17:21
- •Chapter 10
- •Chapter 11
- •Chapter 12
- •Chapter 13
- •Chapter 14
- •Chapter 15
- •Chapter 16
- •Chapter 17
- •Chapter 18
- •Chapter 19
- •Chapter 20
- •Chapter 21
- •Chapter 22
- •Chapter 23
- •Chapter 24
- •Chapter 25
- •Subject: p. Cloucharde‑terminated
- •Message sent chapter 26
- •Chapter 27
- •Dinner at alfredo’s? 8 pm?
- •Chapter 28
- •Chapter 29
- •Please accept this humble fax my love for you is without wax.
- •Tracer searching . . .
- •Tracer abort?
- •Chapter 30
- •Chapter 31
- •Chapter 32
- •Chapter 33
- •Chapter 34
- •Tracer aborted
- •Error code 22
- •Chapter 36
- •Tracer sent
- •Search for: “tracer”
- •No matches found
- •Search for: “screenlock”
- •Great progress! digital fortress is almost done. This thing will set the nsa back decades!
- •Rotating cleartext works! mutation strings are the trick!
- •Chapter 37
- •Chapter 38
- •Chapter 39
- •Chapter 40
- •Chapter 41
- •Subject: rocio eva granada‑terminated subject: hans huber‑terminated
- •Chapter 42
- •Chapter 43
- •Crypto‑production/expenditure
- •Chapter 44
- •Chapter 45
- •Chapter 46
- •Chapter 47
- •Chapter 48
- •Chapter 49
- •Chapter 50
- •Crypto sublevels authorized personnel only
- •Chapter 51
- •Chapter 52
- •Chapter 53
- •Chapter 54
- •Chapter 55
- •Chapter 56
- •Chapter 57
- •Chapter 58
- •Chapter 59
- •Chapter 60
- •Chapter 61
- •Chapter 62
- •Chapter 63
- •Chapter 64
- •Chapter 65
- •Chapter 66
- •Chapter 67
- •Chapter 68
- •Chapter 69
- •Chapter 70
- •Chapter 71
- •Chapter 72
- •Abort run
- •Chapter 73
- •Chapter 74
- •Chapter 75
- •Chapter 76
- •Chapter 77
- •Chapter 78
- •Chapter 79
- •Chapter 80
- •Chapter 81
- •Chapter 82
- •Chapter 83
- •Chapter 84
- •Chapter 85
- •Chapter 86
- •Sorry. Unable to abort. Sorry. Unable to abort. Sorry. Unable to abort.
- •Tell the world about transltr only the truth will save you now . . .
- •Only the truth will save you now
- •Enter pass‑key
- •Chapter 87
- •Chapter 88
- •Chapter 89
- •Chapter 90
- •Chapter 91
- •Chapter 92
- •Chapter 93
- •Chapter 94
- •Chapter 95
- •Chapter 96
- •Chapter 97
- •Chapter 98
- •Chapter 99
- •Chapter 100
- •Subject: david becker‑terminated
- •Chapter 101
- •Chapter 102
- •Chapter 103
- •Chapter 105
- •Chapter 106
- •Chapter 107
- •Chapter 108
- •Chapter 109
- •Only the truth will save you now enter pass‑key ______
- •Only the truth will save you now enter pass‑key ______
- •Chapter 110
- •Chapter 111
- •Chapter 112
- •Chapter 113
- •Chapter 114
- •Chapter 115
- •Chapter 116
- •Chapter 117
- •Only the truth will save you now
- •Chapter 118
- •Quiscustodietipsoscustodes
- •Chapter 119
- •Illegal entry. Numeric field only.
- •Chapter 120
- •Pfee sesn retm
- •Pfee sesn retm mfha irwe ooig meen nrma enet shas dcns iiaa ieer brnk fble lodi
- •Pfeesesnretmpfhairweooigmeennrmaenetshasdcnsiiaaieerbrnkfblelodi
- •Chapter 121
- •Chapter 122
- •Primedifferencebetweenelementsresponsibleforhiroshimaandnagasaki
- •Chapter 123
- •Prime difference between elements responsible for hiroshima and nagasaki
- •Chapter 124
- •Prime difference between elements responsible forhiroshima and nagasaki
- •Chapter 125
- •Chapter 126
- •Chapter 127
- •Enter pass‑key? 3
- •Kill code confirmed.
- •Chapter 128
- •Epilogue
Chapter 116
“Read it, Mr. Becker!” Fontaine ordered.
Jabba sat sweating, hands poised over his keyboard. “Yes,” he said, “read the blessed inscription!”
Susan Fletcher stood with them, weak‑kneed and aglow. Everyone in the room had stopped what they were doing and stared up at the enormous projection of David Becker. The professor twisted the ring in his fingers and studied the engraving.
“And read carefully!” Jabba commanded. “One typo, and we’re screwed!”
Fontaine gave Jabba a harsh look. If there was one thing the director of the NSA knew about, it was pressure situations; creating additional tension was never wise. “Relax, Mr. Becker. If we make a mistake, we’ll reenter the code till we get it right.”
“Bad advice, Mr. Becker,” Jabba snapped. “Get it right the first time. Kill‑codes usually have a penalty clause‑to prevent trial‑and‑error guessing. Make an incorrect entry, and the cycle will probably accelerate. Make two incorrect entries, and it will lock us out permanently. Game over.”
The director frowned and turned back to the screen. “Mr. Becker? My mistake. Read carefully‑read extremely carefully.”
Becker nodded and studied the ring for a moment. Then he calmly began reciting the inscription. “Q . . . U . . . I . . . S . . . space . . . C . . .”
Jabba and Susan interrupted in unison. “Space?” Jabba stopped typing. “There’s a space?”
Becker shrugged, checking the ring. “Yeah. There’s a bunch of them.”
“Am I missing something?” Fontaine demanded. “What are we waiting for?”
“Sir,” Susan said, apparently puzzled. “It’s . . . it’s just . . .”
“I agree,” Jabba said. “It’s strange. Passwords never have spaces.”
Brinkerhoff swallowed hard. “So, what are you saying?”
“He’s saying,” Susan interjected, “that this may not be a kill‑code.”
Brinkerhoff cried out, “Of course it’s the kill‑code! What else could it be? Why else would Tankado give it away? Who the hell inscribes a bunch of random letters on a ring?”
Fontaine silenced Brinkerhoff with a sharp glare.
“Ah . . . folks?” Becker interjected, appearing hesitant to get involved. “You keep mentioning random letters. I think I should let you know . . . the letters on this ring aren’t random.”
Everyone on the podium blurted in unison. “What!”
Becker looked uneasy. “Sorry, but there are definitely words here. I’ll admit they’re inscribed pretty close together; at first glance it appears random, but if you look closely you’ll see the inscription is actually . . . well . . . it’s Latin.”
Jabba gaped. “You’re shitting me!”
Becker shook his head. “No. It reads, 'Quis custodiet ipsos custodes.' It translates roughly to—”
“Who will guard the guards!” Susan interrupted, finishing David’s sentence.
Becker did a double‑take. “Susan, I didn’t know you could—”
“It’s from Satires of Juvenal,” she exclaimed. “Who will guard the guards? Who will guard the NSA while we guard the world? It was Tankado’s favorite saying!”
“So,” Midge demanded, “is it the pass‑key, or not?”
“It must be the pass‑key,” Brinkerhoff declared.
Fontaine stood silent, apparently processing the information.
“I don’t know if it’s the key,” Jabba said. “It seems unlikely to me that Tankado would use a nonrandom construction.”
“Just omit the spaces,” Brinkerhoff cried, “and type the damn code!”
Fontaine turned to Susan. “What’s your take, Ms. Fletcher?”
She thought a moment. She couldn’t quite put her finger on it, but something didn’t feel right. Susan knew Tankado well enough to know he thrived on simplicity. His proofs and programming were always crystalline and absolute. The fact that the spaces needed to be removed seemed odd. It was a minor detail, but it was a flaw, definitely not clean‑not what Susan would have expected as Ensei Tankado’s crowning blow.
“It doesn’t feel right,” Susan finally said. “I don’t think it’s the key.”
Fontaine sucked in a long breath, his dark eyes probing hers. “Ms. Fletcher, in your mind, if this is not the key, why would Ensei Tankado have given it away? If he knew we’d murdered him‑don’t you assume he’d want to punish us by making the ring disappear?”
A new voice interrupted the dialogue. “Ah . . . Director?”
All eyes turned to the screen. It was Agent Coliander in Seville. He was leaning over Becker’s shoulder and speaking into the mic. “For whatever it’s worth, I’m not so sure Mr. Tankado knew he was being murdered.”
“I beg your pardon?” Fontaine demanded.
“Hulohot was a pro, sir. We saw the kill‑only fifty meters away. All evidence suggests Tankado was unaware.”
“Evidence?” Brinkerhoff demanded. “What evidence? Tankado gave away this ring. That’s proof enough!”
“Agent Smith,” Fontaine interrupted. “What makes you think Ensei Tankado was unaware he was being killed?”
Smith cleared his throat. “Hulohot killed him with an NTB‑a noninvasive trauma bullet. It’s a rubber pod that strikes the chest and spreads out. Silent. Very clean. Mr. Tankado would only have felt a sharp thump before going into cardiac arrest.”
“A trauma bullet,” Becker mused to himself. “That explains the bruising.”
“It’s doubtful,” Smith added, “that Tankado associated the sensation with a gunman.”
“And yet he gave away his ring,” Fontaine stated.
“True, sir. But he never looked for his assailant. A victim always looks for his assailant when he’s been shot. It’s instinct.”
Fontaine puzzled. “And you’re saying Tankado didn’t look for Hulohot?”
“No, sir. We have it on film if you’d like—”
“X‑eleven filter’s going!” a technician yelled. “The worm’s halfway there!”
“Forget the film,” Brinkerhoff declared. “Type in the damn kill‑code and finish this!”
Jabba sighed, suddenly the cool one. “Director, if we enter the wrong code . . .”
“Yes,” Susan interrupted, “if Tankado didn’t suspect we killed him, we’ve got some questions to answer.”
“What’s our time frame, Jabba?” Fontaine demanded.
Jabba looked up at the VR. “About twenty minutes. I suggest we use the time wisely.”
Fontaine was silent a long moment. Then sighed heavily. “All right. Run the film.”